3 Mistakes Youngsters Make That Cause Them to Tarmac Long After Completing School
Many people view college as an opportunity to socialize with friends and have plenty of free time to pursue their many life interests. However, the majority of graduates are unprepared for the hardships that life will provide on graduation day. The question of whether to start a business or apply for the increasingly rare formal work positions suddenly arises.
Some people become totally lost in life in the middle of all this chaos, squandering priceless times when they should be enjoying their best years. Who has the blame? Is it our flimsy educational system that fails to provide our students with critical skills? Is it society that isn’t setting a positive example for the next generation? Or has the administration not been able to
Here are three mistakes that graduates make that lead them to suffer long after they graduate, based on personal experience, before you assign blame.
- Picking Only Certain Careers
The issue with the majority of graduates is that they have a propensity to “box” themselves into thinking that their employment options are limited to the courses and specializations they completed while in college.
They believe that because they have experience with accounting, the only job they can do is that of an accounts clerk.
That’s when things become crazy because getting a job that is deemed “relevant” usually isn’t easy. The greatest approach to integrate into the real world after college is to be receptive to any and all possibilities that present themselves. For the love of God, don’t turn down that electrician’s job because you studied economics.
Refuse to turn down a part-time teaching position at your neighborhood secondary school only because you earned a B.Sc. in Actuarial Science. The outside world is more interested in what you can contribute when given even the smallest chance than it is in what you learned in class.
- Not Being Prepared to Offer Assistance
Both that dream business and that white-collar job might not come quickly, and it might take a few days for both to take off. That is the situation as it is. You have to learn to perspire in order to succeed out here.
Offering your skills to others in order to obtain relevant experience is a smart strategy to get your career off to a strong start. Therefore, if you are interested in volunteering for an additional year, don’t be afraid to extend your internship beyond the six months you completed for your coursework.
You can search for nonprofits or new ventures and offer your assistance. If you’re still having trouble finding volunteer opportunities, don’t be afraid to establish something on your own, like a community-based group.
For example, gather ten young people who share your values and begin planting trees and raising awareness of their significance in the community. To improve the quality of education in your community, you may even consider launching a part-time tuition program. A trip of a thousand miles begins with one step, so don’t worry about how low you start on the food chain.
3 Mistakes Youngsters Make That Cause Them to Tarmac Long After Completing School
- Returning to your parents’ house
An old man who was laying on his hospital bed a very long time ago is the subject of a narrative. He discovered a wasp nest, or cocoon, on his room’s corner ceiling while he lay there getting better.
Nestled inside that nest was a little wasp that had only been hatched a few weeks before, and now it was getting too big to stay inside and wanted to break out so it could begin its own life.
Observing the baby wasp’s struggles, the elderly guy carefully got out of bed, walked to the nest, and widened the hole to make it easier for the wasp to exit.
The wasp was free to leave right away, which is good news. The wasp never learnt to fly on its own, which is bad news. Its enthusiasm to take a chance while flying diminished, and its feathers never stiffened. It passed away quickly.
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3 Mistakes Youngsters Make That Cause Them to Tarmac Long After Completing School
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